PCWorld (USA)

Microsoft Edge’s new sidebar widgets are actually worth using

It’s like a control panel for Windows functions.

- BY MARK HACHMAN

If you use Microsoft Edge ( fave.co/ 3TJIDC2), you may notice something new to the right of your browser as of late last week: a small vertical sidebar of icons. Some, specifical­ly a collection of widgets called Tools, are actually worth using.

Adding sidebars functional­ity isn’t new; other browsers, such as Vivaldi ( fave.co/ 3QRFW1B), have made it one of their centerpiec­e features. And Edge, too, has offered sidebar functional­ity for some time, with the ability to search for a term in a sidebar, so as to avoid the need to move to a new window or tab. But the new icons are essentiall­y a control panel for many of the functions you’ll use in Windows.

First, if you want to turn the Edge sidebar off, you can: there’s a small window-ish icon to the bottom. Click it, and the sidebar will slide closed. To reenable it, simply go to the ellipsis (…) menu in the upper right and navigate down to “Show sidebar,” or use the

Ctrl+shift+slash (/) shortcut instead to toggle the Edge sidebar on and off. First, though, the Edge sidebar is worth exploring.

At the top of the column of icons is a Search icon, with the same functional­ity that you’ll find in the Widgets menu that appears in the lower right corner of your screen. It’s a web search, nothing more, nothing less. Microsoft is playing a bit fast and loose with your content preference­s here, however: Edge’s Search box says “Search with Bing,” and it won’t respect your preference for another search engine, like Google.

Below the Search icon is Discover,”which provides some interestin­g context about the page that you’re on. Normally, this Discover informatio­n would appear to the right of a search result on the Bing page. Discover provides you different contextual informatio­n depending on the site; a page on baseball may offer a schedule of the day’s games, or the ability to buy tickets. Sometimes Microsoft will offer an analysis of the site’s traffic. In certain cases, Discover seems to offer various contextual informatio­n from search engines like Yahoo and Duckduckgo, but not Google.

(Editor’s Note: According to a Microsoft representa­tive, the reason I didn’t see Google offered as a search engine was because Google was already my default search engine, which is why I was offered informatio­n about Bing, Yahoo, and Duckduckgo, the representa­tive said via email.)

The idea appears to be that if you have the screen space—and let’s face it, a 4K monitor probably leaves a lot of screen space unused if a tab is opened across the full screen— you can search with the Discover sidebar enabled and have a richer experience.

The Tools option, though, is where the sidebar really starts to shine. Tools aren’t much more than modern representa­tions of some of the traditiona­l Windows widgets (or Gadgets) that populated older Windows operating systems, like Windows XP. Here, you have a choice of everything from a world clock to a calculator to a unit converter, as well as a translator and dictionary plus Bing’s own internet speed test widget at the very bottom. These are genuinely useful little functions.

You can argue that some of the “widgets” in the Widgets drawer are useful as well, if you like knowing the current temperatur­e, stock prices, and traffic. But I always find myself searching for these dumb little conversion­s, and I can certainly appreciate them being at my fingertips.

Edge’s sidebar widgets have room for improvemen­t. First, they’re not open to

third parties, so they’re subject to what Microsoft suggests. And UTC time, or Coordinate­d Universal Time, doesn’t appear in the World Clock either as a UTC option or as the time zone of Greenwich, England, where it resides.

A list of Games appears directly beneath the Tools option. Nothing here will surprise you; there’s just the usual list of Microsoft games including Solitaire, Jigsaw, Crosswords, Bubble, Mahjongg, Wordament, and more. Still, they’re all time-wasters, and detract from the productivi­ty ethos that seems otherwise prevalent.

It’s a little jarring, too, given that directly beneath Games appear Microsoft’s Office and Outlook icons. The Office icon opens a list of documents that have recently been shared with you, and allows you to open the Web apps of Word, Outlook, Onedrive, Teams and more. (Naturally, you’ll need a Microsoft 365 subscripti­on to access them.)

The Outlook icon links only to your personal account, however, with no apparent option to connect to a work or educationa­l account. That’s a little weird, because the Office icon in the sidebar opens up your “work” version of Outlook. Microsoft might want to spend a little time further differenti­ating the two—or at least allow work accounts to be added to the web version of Outlook that appears at the bottom of the list of icons, à la Windows Mail.

It all feels like a little more thought could have been spent on the arrangemen­t of the sidebar icons and what functions they add to your browsing experience. I’d expect more to come, too: I’m not a habitual user of Microsoft To-do, but that feels like a natural fit. So, too, does some sort of Calendar function so you can quickly review and add to your day’s events.

But the Edge sidebar’s widgets help make it worthwhile. And as a whole, the sidebar helps Edge feel a bit more intrinsic to your work and play, too—which is undoubtedl­y what Microsoft set out to achieve.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Click the small icon to the lower right to turn the Edge sidebar off.
Click the small icon to the lower right to turn the Edge sidebar off.
 ?? ?? The Search function looks a lot like the sidebar-search option that already exists in Edge.
The Search function looks a lot like the sidebar-search option that already exists in Edge.
 ?? ?? The Tools portion of the Edge sidebar is clearly its most useful, with all sorts of little utilities.
The Tools portion of the Edge sidebar is clearly its most useful, with all sorts of little utilities.
 ?? ?? The Edge sidebar’s Discover feature.
The Edge sidebar’s Discover feature.
 ?? ?? Games provides all sorts of time-wasters.
Games provides all sorts of time-wasters.

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